1throw9away79, said: "Kind of. We left our spouses around the same time (not for each other) and decided to share a house. We were in our mid-thirties by then and sick of the dating scene, so we just laid it out like a business arrangement."

He added: "What started off as an "arrangement" eventually evolved into something extremely serious and passionate. We've been together now for almost seven years and married for almost one. We are extremely in love and I have zero regrets."

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He wasn't the only one to prove that romance isn't always the key to the relationship getting off the ground.

BattleStag17 said: "She was the loud, popular, social butterfly, I was the awkward sheltered kid. By way of sheer luck and proxy we became very close friends in high school."

"Like I'm sure many of you have experienced yourself, I couldn't not crush on her something fierce, but I obviously wasn't going to make the move on someone so far out of my league and ruin our friendship.

"I forget exactly how the conversation came to be, but at one point she brings up how we should totally get married if we're both still single by the time we're 30.

"Years later I make a Facebook page (waaay behind the curve like anything else in the social realm), we get back in contact. The conversations get longer. And then she brings the pact back up.

"We're getting married in October, five full years before the pact would've happened."

BioKlean911 said: "My best friend of 10 years said to me one day in a group conversation that if we weren't with anyone by the time she was 30 (she was 25 at the time) that we would have to be together. Six months after that conversation, we got married. It was a fairly easy transition. Currently married for 3 years with 2 children."

Although lots of people had success, cagebiter reminded us all of the reality of getting married out of desperation rather than love. "My aunt did. Lasted for a few years until they split."